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Representante Libio: precio del petróleo llegaría a 90 dólares a fin de año


Doron Peskin
Published:  16.06.09, 08:22 / Ynet

 

Shukri Ghanem, representante Libio de la industria del petróleo ante la OPEP dice que el precio del oro negro seguirá subiendo, y a su vez rechaza la afirmación de Merrill Lynch acerca de que el aumento del precio del petróleo será perjudicial para las economías del mundo.


Según Ghanem, el aumento de los precios del petróleo conducirá a una mejora en el mercado mundial debido al aumento de las inversiones por parte de las empresas en busca de petróleo. Añadió que el proceso de subida del precio del petróleo daría lugar a un aumento en la demanda de materiales y servicios relacionados con la industria, en lugar de acelerar la ralentización de la actividad en el mercado mundial.


Señaló que el reciente aumento de los precios del petróleo no tiene nada que ver con el mecanismo de la oferta y la demanda en el mercado, sino con especulaciones. Hizo hincapié en que la oferta es grande y que ésta debería reducir los precios, pero que en la práctica los precios están aumentando debido a los contratos futuros.


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Libyan official: Oil price to reach $90 by year's end
Representative of Libya's oil industry in OPEC says price of black gold will continue to rise, rejects Merrill Lynch's claims that oil appreciation will harm world's economies

Doron Peskin
Published:  06.16.09, 08:22 / Ynet


Shukri Ghanem, a senior official at Libya's oil industry and its representative to the OPEC organization estimated in an interview to the al-Arabiya network that the rise in oil prices would continue till the end of 2009.
 
Ghanem estimated that the price of an oil barrel will reach about $90 by the end of 2009, and the average barrel price throughout the year will stand at $80.
 
Ghanem noted that the recent rise in the prices of oil had nothing to do with the supply and demand mechanism in the market but with speculations. He stressed that the supply was big and that this should send the prices down, but that in practice the prices are rising due to future contracts.
 
The Libyan rejected warnings made by experts of the Merrill Lynch investment bank, who claimed that a barrel price of more than $80 will cause damage to the world's strongest economies.
 
According to Ghanem, the rise in the oil price will lead to an improvement in the global market and to an increase in investments on the part of companies searching for oil. He added that the rise in oil process would lead to a rise in the demand for materials and services related to the oil industry, speeding up rather than slowing down the activity in the global market.
 
Therefore, he claimed, had the oil price continued to drop, the demand for services and products related to the oil industry would have gone down as well.
 
As for Libya, Ghanem stated that it invests today about $7 billion in oil drilling. Over the next five years, Libya's national oil company plans to invest some $72 billion in new searches for oil.
 
Doron Peskin is head of research at Info-Prod Research (Middle East) Ltd.

 

 

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